The strikes narrowly missed a group of foreign journalists covering the border fighting.

The aircraft, some of them A-10 ground attack jets, were attempting to bomb Serb positions just inside Kosovo when they unleashed their load on a line of Albanian military bunkers instead.

"I heard what I thought was a low-flying aircraft overhead but it was a missile. It hit about 100 meters away. I could feel the heat. Debris from the explosion was flying overhead," said Associated Press Television News cameraman Thomas Nicholson, one of a dozen journalists in the area.

The correspondents scattered after the first explosion, and the jets returned again to hit the bunker line.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said a Kosovo Albanian refugee was injured in the second bombing and taken by monitors to nearby Kukes for treatment. His condition apparently was not serious.

A NATO official in Brussels, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said a number of NATO weapons "appear to have landed on Albanian territory near Morini," destroying an Albanian bunker.

The dome-shaped shelters, built during a frenzy of bunker-building during Communist rule, are located about 500 yards within Albanian territory, and about half a mile from the nearest Serb military target.

The OSCE said at least seven bombs were dropped as deep as 2 miles inside Albanian territory.

NATO sorties the past several days are being flown in support of the Kosovo Liberation Army fighting Serb forces just inside Kosovo. The KLA guerrillas have been attempting to move deeper into the embattled Yugoslav province to open up a supply corridor and capture the Serb border checkpoint at Morini.

The OSCE said Serb gunners shelled Albanian artillery positions and bunkers along the borders overnight, damaging the police station at Morini.